NEWS FROM WASHINGTON • Justice Dept. Top FCPA Cop Heads to Morrison & Foerster • DOJ Fights Request for Copy of CIA Interrogation Report • Sitting Out: Recusals Mount Among the Justices • OSHA's Proposed Database Draws Fire • The Broader Lesson From Garcia's Fight To Practice • Unions' Health on the Line After four years at the U.S. Department of Justice leading the charge against Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violators, Charles Duross soon will offer his help to Morrison & Foerster clients looking to keep DOJ's FCPA investigators at bay. Read More » Lawyers for the U.S. Department of Justice are fighting a journalist's request for a copy of a congressional report on the CIA's detention and interrogation policies. Read More » The growing pace of recusals by U.S. Supreme Court justices this term is fueling new concern about the court's ability to function at full strength. Read More » A federal government proposal to make workplace illness and injury records public amounts to "regulation by shaming," say employers, who have tapped top lawyers to derail the controversial initiative by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Read More » Sergio Garcia's battle for bar admission underscores the need for new immigration laws regarding children. Read More » The future of public employee unions may be in the hands of Justice Antonin Scalia as the U.S. Supreme Court considers a case brought by Illinois home care workers who don't want to pay fees to a union they don't want to join. Read More » SUPREME COURT CASES |
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